This is the lead off "misstatement" from Obama? That he called himself a "professor" when he was a "lecturer"? Really?
Pardon me while I piss my pants laughing.
When I taught as a lecturer I was introduced as "professor" by colleagues in classes as well as during faculty-only meetings where I was introduced to a colleague ("Jim, hey, I want you to meet our newest professor, Lars Thorwald. Lars is a lecturer this semester in the new regulatory course...").
Ask a tenured professor whether he or she thinks it is a misstatement.
Now ask a veteran whether telling a tall tale about ducking and running to a car without a greeting ceremony because you were taking sniper fire (Clinton: "That is what happened") is a misstatement. Or if they care.
You will get too very different answers.
This diary is the worst sort of parsing and dissembling I have read in a very long time. It's Clintonian.
er, two very different answers. Pardon the typo. I was...sleep deprived.
I have an attorney in Pennsylvania. When I was considering hiring him I asked what his qualifications were. He listed being an "adjunct law professor" at Duchesne University, a perfectly correct title.
Later, in an e-mail to associates, copied to him, I referred to him as a "law professor". He was quick to correct me. "I'm not a full professor. I'm a lecturer."
An honorable man would leave no doubt as to what his actual status was. My attorney certainly didn't, and he wasn't running for President.
Your attorney's two responses capture exactly what I'm talking about. On a resume, an honorable person would be precise and write "Lecturer, University of Chicago School of Law." But when you're talking about what you're doing, you don't say "I'm a constitutional law lecturer." No one does--just as Lars says.
A simple way to think about the distinction is whether or not the word you're using should be capitalized. Obama's title was "Lecturer," but his job was as a "constitutional law professor." In the same vein, I have a Ph.D. in English, so if anyone actually knew this, they might choose to refer to me as "Doctor Deminva," although I certainly don't work as a doctor.
As your attorney's response indicates, it's not uncommon for an adjunct professor to include the word adjunct when talking about what he or she does -- precisely because it's just an adjective added to the common word, i.e., professor.
Bottom line: If you or anyone else can find any campus in the US where students say things like "Hey, who's the lecturer for that course?" or "Hi, Lecturer Jackson!", then you may have a case.
Note, too, that as a state legislator, Senator Obama most likely had the title of Lecturer because he wasn't full-time faculty or because his legislative duties precluded his involvement in the sorts of things that tenure-track faculty do besides classroom teaching. It wasn't that he couldn't get hired as an Assistant or Associate Professor at Chicago.
Your bottom line is not relevant to the question.
We are not talking about common usage among college students. We are talking about a statement made by the candidate himself as recently as 2007
"`I was a constitutional law professor, which means unlike the current president I actually respect the Constitution,' Obama told an audience at a campaign fundraiser." (Brendan Farrington, "Obama: Bush Fails To Respect The Constitution," The Associated Press, 3/30/07)
Source: Chicago Sun Times, Aug. 8, 2004 (Lynn Sweet, "Obama's Book: What's Real, What's Not" )
If my lawyer could be honest about it, why couldn't Barack Obama?
He was a constitutional law professor -- with the title of Lecturer. It's the difference between asking someone what they do and what their rank is -- many of us have precisely analogous job names and separate official titles. I used to joke with my mother about how proud she must be to have a son who was an "Agency Management Analyst -- General." That was my official title from HR's perspective.
Article in Sun Times: February 12, 2007
http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/ob ama/253391,CST-NWS-prof12.article (same Sunday Times that said he calls himself a professor when he's not)
Professor Obama was a listener, students say
'nuff said.